Will you keep sedition cases in abeyance till you reconsider law, SC asks Union govt
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The Supreme Court Tuesday asked the Union government to apprise it about the views on the issue of protection of interest of citizens till the colonial-era penal law on sedition is
reconsidered by an appropriate forum. A bench headed by Chief Justice N V Ramana took note of the submissions of the Union government that said it has decided to "re-examine and reconsider"
the sedition law by an appropriate forum and sought the response to a suggestion whether the filing of sedition cases in future be kept at abeyance till re-examination.
Solicitor General Tushar Mehta, appearing for the Union government, said that he would take instruction from the government and apprise the bench on Wednesday. We are making it very clear.
We want instructions. We will give you time till tomorrow. Our specific queries are: one about pending cases and the second, as to how the government will take care of future cases..., said
the bench. It sought a response on the issue saying if future cases can be kept at abeyance till reconsideration is over.
The Union Ministry of Home Affairs in an affidavit filed before the apex court on Tuesday said the decision was in tune with the views of Prime Minister Narendra Modi on shedding colonial
baggage, noting that he has been in favour of the protection of civil liberties and respect of human rights and in that spirit, over 1,500 outdated laws and over 25,000 compliance burdens
have been scrapped.
The top court has been hearing a clutch of pleas challenging the validity of the law on sedition which has been under intense public scrutiny for its alleged misuse to settle political
scores by various governments.